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Merit Award
Discovery World at Pier Wisconsin Signage
Location
Milwaukee
Client
Discovery World at Pier Wisconsin
Client Team
Paul Krajniak (executive director), Carl Schoettel (facilities director)
Design
Wojciechowski Design
Design Team
Tom Wojciechowski (principal in charge), Amy Parker (senior designer), Maria Fabila (designer)
Fabrication
Rebechini Studios, 3M (Scotchprint and vinyl letters)
Photos
Tom Wojciechowski
A major new addition to Milwaukee’s cultural corridor on the downtown lakefront, Discovery World at Pier Wisconsin is a celebrated youth-oriented science, technology, and aquatic resources museum. The site is also home to a performance amphitheater and Wisconsin’s official flagship and floating classroom, a replica 19th century schooner.
The museum’s “white box” architecture, set against the expanse of Lake
Michigan, evokes a white lab coat and is a visual counterpoint to the
colorful, kinetic, interactive exhibits inside. The signage
program—including all informational, identifying, wayfinding, and donor
elements for the site and buildings—creates a transition between the
exterior and interior.
Echoing the architecture, exterior signs take on elemental forms and use a
simple, geometric typestyle to identify site features, give directions, and
provide practical and historical information. Painted-aluminum pylons with
cut steel letters will withstand extreme weather conditions.
Inside, signs become more playful and active. Applied directly to painted
walls and glass storefronts, lettering in multiple sizes and shades announces
venues including two theaters, a café, gift shop, and other destinations.
The team tested several different application methods before deciding on
cut vinyl letters, which stand up to cleaning and touching and can be inexpensively
replaced.
Orientation maps provide an exploded perspective view to guide visitors
around, and were developed in concert with overhead identifiers and
strategically placed directional signs, and coordinated with printed
handouts. Many of the signs are designed with a screen to look through,
while still carrying a textural message. The transparent, almost flickering
effect alludes to light playing on Lake Michigan. Where emphasis is needed
for a particular message, dark gray dimensional letters push through the
transparent plane.
The project was completed on a very fast track, begun only five months
before the first of several phased openings of the museum.
Jury Comment
“Understated, refined, elegant, and restrained. The designer has removed
every last bit of non-essential decorative designer drapery, leaving only
the minimal elements needed to support and sustain a clear and concise
system of communication. A tasteful example of a minimalist palette of black
and white and gray.”
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